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Before being adopted out?

2006-07-14 07:00:05 · 10 answers · asked by ontario ashley 4 in Pets Dogs

10 answers

yes! parvo is VERY contagious. it lives in the environment. all dogs are health checked, put on a heart worm preventive, temperament tested, spayed/neutered and vaccinated prior to adoption.


EDITED:
Pamela, was it a pound or animal control center? or a shelter CALLED the humane society or SPCA. the local pound or animal control center are NOT required to vaccinate, spay, or temperament test ANY animal they pick up. most of those poor animals are VERY sick.
a humane society or SPCA is required to do such vaccinations....and if they DIDN'T, i would file a complaint!

2006-07-14 07:07:30 · answer #1 · answered by ? 6 · 0 1

It depends on the shelter. Most shelters control very carefully for Parvo because it can kill every dog in the shelter in a matter of days if just one comes in with it. Our local shelter has a big sign on the door that says "IF YOU SUSPECT YOUR DOG OF HAVING PARVO, DO NOT BRING IT IT!!! Leave it in the car and notify a staff member."

Kennel cough is another matter. Many shelters will vaccinate for kennel cough, but it is typically not deadly, so some places will just leave it be. It is very contagious, but generally just the equivalent of having a bad cold in a human. The pound we rescued one of our dogs from didn't control for kennel cough and he had it when we brought him home. It's a pretty simple treatment and it goes away after a week or so.

2006-07-14 07:08:34 · answer #2 · answered by tenzo0 3 · 0 0

The humane society and its affiliated shelters are nonprofit and do not promote canines. Your friends ought to have had to pay a small area of the look after's expenditures. Shelters commonly provide canines all their pictures and neuters them and the small value they value is a much better deal than paying for all that stuff your self. They likely did run checks on the canines. It sounds like the parvo became purely no longer picked up. i'm sorry on your friends and the canines and that i'm hoping the canines receives better, yet i imagine this purely falls into the category of "unlucky issues now and again ensue." The Humane Society and animal shelters are nevertheless a rigidity for good. This very last bit is from the Humane Society's FAQ web page: "i recently followed an animal from my community animal look after that I later got here upon out became ill. Why did the look after enable a ill animal to be followed? The HSUS believes that animal shelters ought to open their doors to any animal in pick. even as shelters do furnish haven to all animals, they settle for animals of various health degrees, a lot of whom arrive without medical historic previous. a number of those animals received't show indicators in the time of their stay on the look after and ought to only tutor signs and indicators of ailment once they have been placed into an adoptive living house. also, in any large-scale kennel challenge, no matter if it is a boarding kennel, a breeder, a retail puppy keep, or an animal look after, any kind of transmittable diseases should be exceeded between animals restricted to a basic living section. by using funding constraints, many shelters are unable to objective incoming animals for particular diseases. The HSUS encourages communities to help their community animal shelters so that they are waiting to provide the perfect care plausible for the animals they help. once you've concerns about an animal you've followed it is ill, be positive to search for suggestion out of your veterinarian and communicate the challenge with the look after administration."

2016-12-01 07:06:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

YES THEY DO! I have seen a parvo outbreak at a shelter, and it isn't pretty. They do everything they can to test for it, quarantine it if it is found, and all dogs in shelters get regular shots to keep diseases from breaking out and spreading.

2006-07-14 07:06:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Usually. Parvo spreads and kills dogs VERY quickly. If they didn't, they wouldn't have any dogs to adopt out. You should check to make sure though. Parvo is a terrible way for your dog to die.

2006-07-14 07:03:02 · answer #5 · answered by green is clean 4 · 0 0

Nooooooooooooooooo. They do not usually vaccinate any of them until one is adopted out. My shelter where I live gives them a 5 in one shot and a shot for kennel cough when you adopt them them it is your responsibility to get the booster shots afterwards in 2 weeks. My shelter does not give rabies the rabies has to be given by your vet.

2006-07-14 07:26:00 · answer #6 · answered by badgirl41 6 · 0 0

It depends on the humane center, really. If you wonder, ask! But, bearing in mind how devastating this condition is, better to take your puppy to your own vet and make sure he gets the proper treatment, then there will be no question. You'll also want to make sure he gets his heartworm pills.
No sense getting a puppy and letting it die on you just when you've become attached.

2006-07-14 07:06:18 · answer #7 · answered by kaththea s 6 · 0 0

I just adopted a terrier mix from the shelter. When I took her to the vet, she had kennel cough and heart worms. I don't think they check them for anything.

2006-07-14 07:03:04 · answer #8 · answered by pamela_d_99 5 · 0 0

By Parvo, I take it you are referring to the great Italian tenor. I really can't see what he has to do with veterinary matters.

2006-07-14 07:05:04 · answer #9 · answered by Chuck M 2 · 0 0

Yes. They are tested and given all shots.

2006-07-14 08:59:11 · answer #10 · answered by mcghankathy 4 · 0 0

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